Archive.fm

Montana News

Four-day school weeks bring lower performance, higher costs, report says

A growing number of schools in Montana have switched to four-day weeks since the pandemic. A new report from University of Montana researchers shows shorter weeks may hurt student performance and school budgets.

Broadcast on:
03 Oct 2024
Audio Format:
other

With Montana News, I'm Elinor Smith. A growing number of schools in Montana have switched to four-day weeks since the pandemic. A new report from University of Montana researchers shows shorter weeks may hurt student performance and school budgets. MTPR's Austin Amistoy has more. The researchers say data analysis on four-day school weeks "demonstrates a disturbing trend for education in Montana." They found that student performance under four-day school weeks declines. The longer a district uses the schedule and legs behind kids in traditional five-day weeks. Schools with shorter weeks often spend more on instruction, maintenance, transportation, and food per student than similarly sized schools on a five-day schedule. A typical Class B school in Montana would likely spend about $100,000 more annually after transitioning to a four-day week, according to the report. State lawmakers allowed schools to switch to four-day instruction in 2005. Since then, 260 mostly small schools have adopted the schedule. District leaders have suggested shorter weeks could help them recruit and retain teachers. But the researchers say more evidence is needed to prove or disprove that argument. The report's authors recommend a return to five-day school weeks statewide. Reporting in Missoula, I'm Austin Amistoy.